Janne Jalkanen schrieb:
Did you empty the browser cache with shift-reload so that you didn't
get the old JS file?
You might be interested in this project:
https://weblets.dev.java.net/
I use it in a JSF project and it works nicely:
(a) solving the stale-resource problem when new releases
Thanks for the suggestion. Unfortunately it made no difference at all.
As before, the pages still can *contain* umlaut characters fine. But
using such a character in a page name causes:
* bad filename encoding (all umlaut chars encoded as %C3%83)
* bad pagename display: all umlaut chars
Hi,
I just checked out the jspwiki 2.6.3 code from svn.
I used this dir here:
http://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/incubator/jspwiki/tags/jspwiki_2_6_3/
I am surprised to see that this directory contains the subdir:
Hi Florian,
Thanks for testing that. I should have thought of trying this out on the
jspwiki site.
Your examples on the jspwiki site work fine for me. This is not too
surprising; there are enough non-english jspwiki installations that
people would have raised this before if it was a bug
I've run the jspwiki 2.6.3 unit tests on linux, and test
WikiEngineTest.testSpacedNames1
fails.
The test is simple:
public void testSpacedNames1()
throws Exception
{
m_engine.saveText(This is a test, puppaa);
assertEquals( normal, puppaa, m_engine.getText(This
Hi,
I'm having trouble with JSPWiki 2.6.3 and unicode characters. I would
appreciate some help.
I've installed jspwiki 2.6.3 on SuSe linux, which is UTF-8 by default:
locale
LANG=de_DE.UTF-8
LC_CTYPE=de_DE.UTF-8
And I've left the jspwiki.properties setting of jspwiki.encoding =
UTF-8
Olaf Kock schrieb:
Simon Kitching schrieb:
By the way, I don't see cookies as a lot more secure. The cookie text is
also sent in plain text in both the request and response bodies. There
aren't many cases where someone can intercept the url but not the
cookies. But thanks
of best-practice
advice from the security community -- to write their own patches. But
it is extremely unlikely that JSPWiki will ever incorporate a no
cookie (URL rewriting) feature.
Andrew
On Jun 18, 2008, at 10:20 AM, Simon Kitching wrote:
Hi,
This email from 2006 says that url